Cecelia did not bother to twitch her answer. It was a lucky guess, that was all, or the infuriating certainty that she was in a predicted stage. They couldn’t tell; they’d been nagging her because she didn’t have control of her facial muscles, so it couldn’t be the scowl she would like to have worn.
A warm hand lay on her arm; it radiated comfort. “Here,” Carly said. “Anger tenses certain muscle groups, and fear tenses different ones. You’re tense in all the anger groups. I don’t think the others saw that, because of the overall weakness. Does it make you even more angry that I know you’re angry?”
Cecelia thought about it, drawn into the intellectual puzzle despite herself. If it was an observation of her, of her real self, she didn’t mind. It was being put into a category that made her want to scream.
“You’re not as angry now,” Carly said. Her hand moved slowly along Cecelia’s arm. “Perhaps because I paid real attention to you, and not a theory?” Her voice, almost as warm as her hand, conveyed honest curiosity, real interest.
Cecelia could feel herself calming, the prickly rage receding.
“You’ve had good therapists, but they’re young,” Carly said. “And the enthusiasms of younglings can drive anyone mature to tears or screams. Besides, they’ve worked you too hard. I think you’re tired, more than they’ve believed. Would you like to sleep?”
Cecelia twitched yes, and then shrugged both shoulders.
“You would, but what’s the use? Or, you would but then this session is wasted?” Carly waited. Cecelia wondered how she was supposed to answer that with a yes or no, and in the silence—a peaceful, accepting silence—wondered if she could move anything else enough to communicate. She had clamped onto a horse’s mane, first with her right hand, and then with both. If the first alternative was one hand, the second could be both. She tried to visualize her hands moving, and felt the fabric under her fingers slide across her fingertips.
“Both hands,” Carly said, with approval. “That would be the second choice, I expect. Can you confirm with your shoulder?”
Yes.
“Then I would say this session is not a waste, even if you sleep the rest of it. You’re tense, and angry, and very tired. I’m going to make you comfortable.”
Carly’s warm hands, steady and firm, kneaded sore muscles and ligaments. Not the massages that Cecelia remembered, but something deeper and more serious. Soon she was drifting, not quite in contact with her aging body, but not in the sensory limbo of the drugs. She felt warm, contented, relaxed, and very sleepy.
When she woke, she felt completely adrift. Someone’s hands steadied her back; she was leaning against—over?—something.
“It’s all right,” Carly said. “You slept well, and now you’re resting on a large padded ball. If your arms feel funny, it’s because they’re hanging free, not at your sides.”
It felt worse than funny; it felt ridiculous. Yet it also felt good, and she was rested and comfortable.
“Can you wiggle your hands again?” Carly asked. Something about her voice, her mature, calm voice, maintained the relaxation. Cecelia tried. With her arms resting against the curve of the ball, almost dangling, she could move her fingers. She could feel them shift across the fabric one by one. “Excellent,” Carly said. “Some of the things they worried about aren’t so. You don’t have real spasticity in your fingers; the weakness and the tension in your arms have made it seem so. In this position, when you’re rested, you might even tap a keyboard.”
A keyboard. A keyboard meant letters, meant words, meant language, meant—she had been told this—a speech synthesizer. Real communication, not just twitches and jerks. She wanted to cry and laugh at once; she felt her shoulders seize, cramping. Carly rubbed the cramps out.
“Right now, the biochemical responses of your limbic system are working against you. Like anyone else, you’ll do best when you’re relaxed and happy. That’s my job.”
Why hadn’t the others thought of this? Cecelia felt the difference in Carly’s hands, as they responded to her muscles rather than trying to overpower them. Her arms twitched, trembled, then finally hung relaxed and heavy. Comfortable. It had been so long since she’d been really comfortable.
“It’s been known for a very long time,” Carly said. “But it’s tricky to do, and a lot of people don’t think it’s important. If a regen tank will work, if the rehab is expected to be short, they say why bother? I think it’s always worth it, for the patient’s comfort if nothing else. And in cases like this, it’s essential.”
Cecelia felt mildly alert, rested, ready to try again. That afternoon, the relentless work with weights seemed less impossible. She was sweating, gasping, sore—but it made sense again. Afterwards, Carly gave her another massage, easing the pains of the exercises, and she slept well that night, waking rested and eager to go on.
Day by day, Carly suggested modifications to the various therapists—a tactile guide that let her get a bit of food to her own mouth, a communication system that used every movement she could make to signal meaning. After that came a communication board, with tactile clues for its segments; Carly promised that work on that would give her the strength and precision to use a real keyboard later. Cecelia began to believe again that she could make it out of this mess, that she would not be a helpless blind victim forever. Now her anger rose from impatience, not despair; she wanted her life back, and she wanted it now.
The Guerni Republic traded widely with a dozen different political entities. On one side, the Compassionate Hand and the Familias Regnant beyond. On the other, Aethar’s World and its allies (a confederation so loose it refused the name). On yet another, some solo worlds so scattered that political union had so far been impractical. Like Italy’s central protrusion into the Mediterranean on old Earth (back when that body of water was known as Mare Nostrum), the Guerni Republic enjoyed a location both handy for trade and easy to defend.
Astrophysicists had argued the unlikelihood of six stars of the right type, with assorted habitable planets, arriving at such a configuration by chance, but the unanswerable counterargument was that everything—even the taste of chocolate—was inherently unlikely, difficult as it may be to imagine a universe without chocolate in it. The Guernesi preferred to believe their situation had been created for them by a beneficent deity, and shrugged off contrary theories as the envy of those God chose not to favor. In case that envy went further than bad-mannered carping, the Guernesi maintained an alert and quietly competent military, as the Compassionate Hand had found. As practical in its way as the Guerni Republic, the Benignity declared the Guernesi off-limits to Compassionate Hand activity—at least as long as delicate probes of the defenses showed them to be still alert and effective.
As a result of their location and the resulting trade, the Guernesi had developed efficient and relatively painless entrance protocols. But efficient, painless, and swift did not mean careless.
“While it’s no concern of ours, are you aware that your broadcast ID and your ship do not agree?” asked the bright-faced young woman in blue.
“I beg your pardon?”
“According to our database, the Better Luck was scrapped over in Jim-dandy eight years ago. I know the Familias records aren’t kept that long, but if you bought this ship as the Better Luck we could provide the data to sustain a claim of fraud.” For a price, of course. The Guernesi, polite and willing to help, did nothing for nothing.
“Uh . . . I don’t think that will be necessary.” Heris had trouble not looking at Oblo. He would be embarrassed.